[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 177 (Wednesday, September 12, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 46237-46241]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-19885]


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SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION

[Docket No. SBA-2018-0008]


Community Advantage Pilot Program

AGENCY: U.S. Small Business Administration.

ACTION: Notice of extension of and changes to Community Advantage Pilot 
Program; and request for comments.

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SUMMARY: The Community Advantage (``CA'') Pilot Program is a pilot 
program to increase SBA-guaranteed loans to small businesses in 
underserved areas. The Small Business Administration (``SBA'') 
continues to refine and improve the design of the Community Advantage 
Pilot Program. To support SBA's commitment to expanding access to 
capital for small businesses and entrepreneurs in underserved markets, 
SBA is issuing this Notice to extend the term of the CA Pilot Program, 
to mitigate risks of the program by placing a moratorium on accepting 
new CA Lender applications, to limit fees that can be collected from an 
applicant for a CA loan, and to revise other program requirements.

DATES: The moratorium on accepting applications from lenders for 
participation in the CA Pilot Program and all other changes identified 
in this Notice will be effective on October 1,

[[Page 46238]]

2018. The CA Pilot Program will remain in effect until September 30, 
2022.
    Comment Date: Comments must be received on or before November 13, 
2018.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by SBA docket number 
SBA-2018-0008, by any of the following methods:
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov/. 
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
     Mail: Daniel Upham, Acting Director, Office of Economic 
Opportunity, U.S. Small Business Administration, 409 Third Street SW, 
Washington, DC 20416 or Dianna Seaborn, Director, Office of Financial 
Assistance, U.S. Small Business Administration, 409 Third Street SW, 
Washington, DC 20416.
     Hand Delivery/Courier: Daniel Upham, Acting Director, 
Office of Economic Opportunity, U.S. Small Business Administration, 409 
Third Street SW, Washington, DC 20416; or Dianna Seaborn, Director, 
Office of Financial Assistance, U.S. Small Business Administration, 409 
Third Street SW, Washington, DC 20416.
    SBA will post all comments on https://www.regulations.gov. If you 
wish to submit confidential business information (CBI) as defined in 
the User Notice at https://www.regulations.gov, please submit the 
information to Daniel Upham, Acting Director, Office of Economic 
Opportunity, U.S. Small Business Administration, 409 Third Street SW, 
Washington, DC 20416; or Dianna Seaborn, Director, Office of Financial 
Assistance, U.S. Small Business Administration, 409 Third Street SW, 
Washington, DC 20416 or send an email to [email protected]. 
Highlight the information that you consider to be CBI and explain why 
you believe SBA should hold this information as confidential. SBA will 
review the information and make the final determination as to whether 
it will publish the information.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Daniel Upham, Acting Director, Office 
of Economic Opportunity, U.S. Small Business Administration, 409 Third 
Street SW, Washington, DC 20416, (202) 205-7001, [email protected]; 
or Dianna Seaborn, Director, Office of Financial Assistance, U.S. Small 
Business Administration, 409 Third Street SW, Washington, DC 20416, 
(202) 205-3645, [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

1. Background

    On February 18, 2011, SBA issued a notice and request for comments 
introducing the CA Pilot Program (76 FR 9626). The CA Pilot Program was 
introduced to increase the number of SBA-guaranteed 7(a) loans made to 
small businesses in underserved markets. The February 18, 2011 notice 
provided an overview of the CA Pilot Program requirements and, pursuant 
to the authority provided to SBA under 13 CFR 120.3 to suspend, modify 
or waive certain regulations in establishing and testing pilot loan 
initiatives, SBA modified or waived as appropriate certain regulations 
which otherwise apply to 7(a) loans for the CA Pilot Program.
    Subsequent notices have made changes to the CA Pilot Program to 
improve the program experience for participants, improve their ability 
to deliver capital to underserved markets, and appropriately manage 
risk to the Agency. These notices were issued on the following dates: 
September 12, 2011 (76 FR 56262), February 8, 2012 (77 FR 6619), 
November 9, 2012 (77 FR 67433), and December 28, 2015 (80 FR 80872). In 
the December 28, 2015 notice, SBA stated that it would evaluate the CA 
Pilot Program to refine the program and to determine whether it should 
be made permanent, with evaluation criteria including, but not limited 
to, whether the pilot is achieving its objective(s), impact on job 
creation and retention, impact on business creation and/or business 
expansion, whether the costs (including losses) of the pilot are within 
an acceptable range, and portfolio performance as it relates to other 
7(a) programs. SBA recently conducted an analysis to compare the 
performance of CA loans to other relevant groups of 7(a) loans and to 
the entire 7(a) portfolio, and found that CA loans exhibit more risk 
than other 7(a) loans. As discussed further below, the analysis found 
that the CA loan portfolio had a higher early problem loan rate, higher 
early default rate, and the last 12 month default rate is trending 
higher than other similar 7(a) loans and the overall 7(a) portfolio. In 
an effort to mitigate this risk and in order to ensure that SBA's 
Office of Credit Risk Management (``OCRM'') continues to be able to 
properly oversee lenders participating in the CA Pilot Program, SBA is 
issuing this Notice to place a moratorium on the acceptance of new 
Community Advantage Lender Participation Applications (``CA Lender 
Applications'') and to further revise program requirements, as 
described more fully below.
    The CA Pilot Program is currently set to expire March 31, 2020. 
With this Notice, SBA is extending the pilot program until September 
30, 2022. This extension will allow for additional time to evaluate the 
pilot, and if warranted, begin the process for it to be made permanent.

2. Comments

    Although the moratorium on accepting applications for new CA 
Lenders and all other changes are effective October 1, 2018, comments 
are solicited from interested members of the public on all aspects of 
the CA Pilot Program. Comments must be submitted on or before the 
deadline for comments listed in the DATES section. SBA will consider 
these comments and the need for making any revisions as a result of 
these comments.

3. Changes to the Community Advantage Pilot Program

a. Moratorium on Acceptance of New CA Lender Applications

    As a pilot loan program, the CA Pilot Program is intended to be 
available to a limited number of lenders to allow the Agency to test 
new methods for expanding access to capital for small businesses in 
underserved markets. The limited scope of the program allows SBA to 
evaluate its effectiveness without unduly increasing risk to the 
Agency. Since its inception in 2011, the CA Pilot Program has grown to 
113 CA Lenders across 39 states, 99 of which are actively making and 
servicing CA loans. SBA has determined that there is a sufficient 
number and geographical diversity of CA Lenders to evaluate the pilot; 
therefore, it is unnecessary to further increase the number of lenders 
participating in the CA Pilot Program at this time.
    In addition, while almost all 7(a) Lenders have a primary Federal 
financial regulator or a state financial regulator, all CA Lenders are 
classified as ``SBA Supervised Lenders,'' as defined in 13 CFR 120.10, 
and as a result, oversight of CA Lenders is more resource-intensive for 
SBA than oversight of other 7(a) Lenders.
    Furthermore, a recent SBA analysis found that CA loans exhibit more 
risk than other 7(a) loans. (See https://www.sba.gov/document/support-community-advantage-pilot-program-analysis.) Specifically, SBA compared 
CA loans to non-CA 7(a) loans of $250,000 or less, non-CA 7(a) loans of 
$250,000 or less made to underserved businesses,\1\ and to the entire 
7(a)

[[Page 46239]]

portfolio. The analysis found that the CA loan portfolio had a higher 
early problem loan rate,\2\ higher early default rate,\3\ and the last 
12 month default rate \4\ is trending higher than the other 7(a) loan 
groups and the overall 7(a) portfolio. The credit quality of the CA 
portfolio, as measured by the Small Business Risk Portfolio Solution 
(``SBPS'') Score,\5\ is also lower than the other 7(a) loan groups and 
the overall 7(a) portfolio. In addition, the credit quality of the CA 
Loan portfolio has declined since 2015 while the credit quality of the 
rest of the 7(a) portfolio has increased. Finally, the cumulative 
purchase rate \6\ of CA loans is consistently higher than the 
cumulative purchase rates in the other 7(a) loan groups and the overall 
7(a) portfolio. For example, the cumulative purchase rate of CA loans 
for cohort 2013 is 7.9%, over three times greater than the cumulative 
purchase rate for cohort 2013 for the 7(a) portfolio (2.2%).
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    \1\ For purposes of the analysis, underserved businesses 
included loans to minorities, veterans, or women-owned businesses, 
as reported by the borrowers.
    \2\ Early problem loan rate means the gross approval amount of 
young loans (36 months on book or less) that have had either a 
deferred, delinquent (60 or more days past due), liquidated, 
purchased, or charged off status within 18 months of disbursement, 
divided by the gross approval amount of young loans.
    \3\ Early default rate means the gross balance at default of 
young loans (36 months on book or less) that experienced a default 
event (liquidation or purchase) within the first 18 months of 
disbursement, divided by the gross approval amount of young loans.
    \4\ Last 12 month default rate means the default amount (gross 
outstanding balance at purchase or liquidation) of all loans that 
have defaulted over the last 12 months, divided by the average 
active balance over the last 12 months plus the default amounts of 
the last 12 months.
    \5\ The SBPS score is an indication of the relative credit 
quality of the businesses and predicts a business's propensity to 
become severely delinquent in debt in the next 12 to 24 months.
    \6\ Cumulative purchase rate means all purchases from loans 
approved in the same fiscal year, divided by all disbursement 
dollars of loans approved in the same fiscal year.
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    Given the increased risk of CA loans as compared to other 7(a) 
loans, the need for more resource-intensive oversight of CA Lenders, 
and the fact that the CA Pilot Program already includes a sufficient 
number of geographically dispersed CA Lenders, SBA has decided to place 
a moratorium on acceptance of new CA Lender applications. Effective 
October 1, 2018, SBA will no longer accept CA Lender Applications (SBA 
Form 2301). Completed CA Lender Applications that are received before 
October 1, 2018 will be fully evaluated, and a decision whether to 
allow the applicant to participate in the CA Pilot Program will be made 
based on the criteria in Appendix C of Version 4.0 of the Community 
Advantage Participant Guide, which is the version in effect at the time 
of receipt of such applications. Any CA Lender Applications that have 
been submitted to SBA but are incomplete as of October 1, 2018 will not 
be processed.

b. Expanded Underserved Market Definition

    The original February 18, 2011 notice introducing the CA Pilot 
Program defined underserved markets to include: Low-to-moderate income 
communities (``LMI''); Empowerment Zones and Enterprise Communities; 
HUBZones; New businesses; Businesses eligible for Patriot Express, 
including Veteran-owned businesses; and Firms where more than 50% of 
their full time workforce is low-income or resides in LMI census 
tracts. In the December 28, 2015 notice, SBA revised this program 
definition to include designated Promise Zones as an underserved 
market. In the December 28, 2015 update to the Community Advantage 
Participant Guide, SBA again updated the definition of underserved 
market to remove ``Businesses eligible for Patriot Express'' and 
replace it with ``Businesses eligible for SBA Veterans Advantage,'' as 
the Patriot Express Pilot Initiative expired on December 31, 2013.
    SBA is now further revising the definition of underserved markets 
to include Opportunity Zones and Rural Areas. An Opportunity Zone is an 
economically distressed community that has been nominated by the state 
and certified by the Secretary of the U.S. Treasury as a community in 
which new investments, under certain conditions, may be eligible for 
preferential tax treatment. More information and a list of Opportunity 
Zones for all states are available at https://www.cdfifund.gov/Pages/Opportunity-Zones.aspx. A Rural Area, for purposes of the CA Pilot 
Program, is a county that the U.S. Census Bureau has defined as 
``Mostly Rural'' or ``Completely Rural'' in its most recent decennial 
census report. More information on Rural Areas, including the 2010 
County Classification Lookup Table, is available at https://www.sba.gov/about-sba/sba-initiatives/sba-rural-lending-initiative and 
on the Welcome Screen for the Capital Access Financial System 
(``CAFS'') at https://caweb.sba.gov/cls/dsp_login.cfm. In order to 
accomplish this change, SBA is waiving the definition of ``Rural Area'' 
in 13 CFR 120.10, ``Definitions'', for purposes of the CA Pilot 
Program.

c. Debt Refinancing

    Currently, all debt refinancing in the CA Pilot Program must meet 
the requirements for refinancing set forth in the version of SOP 50 10 
in effect at the time of loan approval, with two modifications. First, 
the CA Lender must demonstrate either (a) a 10 percent improvement in 
cash flow; or (b) that the CA loan exceeds the amount being refinanced 
by at least $5,000 or 25 percent, whichever is greater. Second, a CA 
Lender seeking to refinance non-SBA guaranteed, same institution debt 
must include a transcript showing the due dates and when payments were 
received for the most recent six month period. If there are any late 
payments in the most recent six month period, the debt may not be 
refinanced with a CA loan. Late payments are defined as any payment 
made beyond 29 days of the due date.
    SBA is modifying the requirements for refinancing non-SBA 
guaranteed, same institution debt to require a transcript showing the 
due dates and when payments were received for the most recent 12 month 
period, rather than six months. If there are any late payments in the 
most recent 12 month period, the debt may not be refinanced with a CA 
loan. In addition, debts on the CA Lender's books for less than 12 
months may not be refinanced with a CA loan.

d. Delegated Authority

    OCRM evaluates all CA applicants for delegated authority 
eligibility at the time of application to become a CA Lender. 
Currently, if a prospective lender is not determined to be eligible for 
delegated authority at the time of approval as a CA Lender, it must 
wait until after it has participated in the CA Pilot Program for six 
months before it can request another determination. SBA is revising the 
eligibility requirements applicable to CA Lenders applying for 
delegated authority by extending the waiting period from six months to 
12 months.
    In addition, under current requirements, a CA Lender that is 
determined to be eligible for delegated authority may not process loans 
using its delegated authority until (i) it closes and makes an initial 
disbursement on five non-delegated CA loans, and (ii) OCRM determines, 
in consultation with the Loan Guaranty Processing Center (``LGPC''), 
that it has satisfactory knowledge of SBA Loan Program Requirements. 
SBA is increasing the number of CA loans that must be initially 
disbursed before a CA Lender may receive approval to process

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applications under delegated authority. Effective October 1, 2018, the 
number of loans is increased to seven.

e. Minimum Credit Score

    SBA is increasing the minimum acceptable credit score for CA loans. 
As further described in the Community Advantage Participant Guide, all 
CA loan applications receive a credit score at the time of submission 
of the application for guaranty to SBA. A credit score at or above the 
minimum acceptable credit score satisfies the need to consider several 
required underwriting criteria, including part of the analysis to 
determine reasonable assurance of repayment from cash flow. If a CA 
Lender believes there are mitigating issues to justify a loan, despite 
an unacceptable credit score, the Lender may contact the LGPC with a 
full credit write-up for consideration.\7\ Applications with credit 
scores below the minimum may not be processed under a CA Lender's 
delegated authority.
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    \7\ See Community Advantage Participant Guide for further 
details. The requirements for a full credit write-up are set forth 
in SOP 50 10.
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    SBA recently compared default rates \8\ of CA loans with credit 
scores ranging from 120 (the current minimum) to 139, and CA loans with 
credit scores of 140 or greater. The analysis showed that CA loans with 
credit scores of less than 140 had much higher default rates, sometimes 
as much as three times higher than CA loans with credit scores greater 
than or equal to 140. Accordingly, SBA is increasing the minimum 
acceptable credit score for the CA Pilot Program from 120 to 140.
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    \8\ The analysis looked at last 12 month default rate, which 
means the default amount (gross outstanding balance at purchase or 
liquidation) of all loans that have defaulted over the last 12 
months, divided by the average active balance over the last 12 
months plus the default amounts of the last 12 months.
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f. Loan Loss Reserve Requirements

    CA Lenders are required to create a Loan Loss Reserve Account 
(``LLRA'') to cover potential losses arising from defaulted loans. The 
reserve fund is to cover both losses from the unguaranteed portion of 
defaulted loans as well as possible repairs and denials associated with 
SBA's guaranty on CA loans sold into SBA's secondary market. In the 
November 9, 2012 notice, SBA reduced the LLRA requirement from 15 
percent of the outstanding amount of the unguaranteed portion of a CA 
Lender's CA loan portfolio to five percent. In that notice, SBA also 
established an additional reserve requirement for CA Lenders with 
secondary market authority. The additional reserve requirement was set 
at three percent of the outstanding amount of the guaranteed portion of 
each CA loan sold in the secondary market.
    Given the increased risk of CA loans as compared to other 7(a) 
loans, SBA has determined that the current reserve requirements are 
insufficient with respect to CA loans sold in the secondary market. SBA 
is at higher risk on defaulted loans in the secondary market because 
SBA must make payment to the secondary market investor before it can 
attempt to recover any denials or repairs from the CA Lender. To 
address this risk, for each CA loan approved on or after October 1, 
2018, a reserve of five percent of the outstanding amount of the 
guaranteed portion must be deposited in the LLRA if the loan is sold in 
the secondary market. All other requirements regarding the creation and 
maintenance of the LLRA stated in the February 18, 2011 notice and all 
subsequent notices remain unchanged, including the five percent reserve 
requirement on the unguaranteed portion of CA loans. Failure to 
maintain the LLRA as required may result in removal from the CA Pilot 
Program, the imposition of additional controls or reserve amounts, and/
or other action permitted by SBA regulation or otherwise by law. Based 
on the risk characteristics or performance of a CA Lender, OCRM in its 
discretion and in consultation with the Director of the Office of 
Financial Assistance may require additional amounts to be included in 
the LLRA.
    In the November 9, 2012 notice, SBA also modified its regulation at 
13 CFR 120.660 to allow the Director, Office of Credit Risk Management 
instead of the Director, Office of Financial Assistance to suspend 
secondary market authority for CA Lenders under that regulation. 
Effective September 20, 2017, however, SBA amended this regulation with 
respect to all 7(a) Lenders to provide that suspensions and revocations 
under 13 CFR 120.660 would be taken by the Director, Office of 
Financial Assistance together with the Director, Office of Credit Risk 
Management. Thus, SBA's 2012 modification of 13 CFR 120.660 for 
purposes of the CA Pilot Program to permit the Director, Office of 
Credit Risk Management to take action under this regulation is no 
longer necessary.

g. Limitation on Fees a CA Lender May Charge

    Currently, 13 CFR 120.221(a) permits a lender to charge an 
applicant reasonable fees (customary for similar lenders in the 
geographic area where the loan is being made) for packaging and other 
services. Under the current regulation, SBA permits lenders to charge 
an applicant a reasonable fee to assist the applicant with the 
preparation of the application and supporting materials. However, SBA 
does not permit lenders to charge an applicant a commitment, broker, 
referral, or similar fee.
    For purposes of the CA Pilot Program, SBA is modifying 13 CFR 
120.221(a) to limit the total fees an applicant can be charged by a CA 
Lender for assistance in obtaining a CA loan. Regardless of what the 
fee is called (e.g., a packaging fee, application fee, etc.), the CA 
Lender is permitted to collect a fee from the applicant that is no more 
than $2,500. With the exception of necessary out-of-pocket costs such 
as filing or recording fees permitted in Sec.  120.221(c), this is the 
only fee that a CA Lender may collect directly or indirectly from an 
applicant for assistance with obtaining a CA loan. In addition, the CA 
Lender may not split a loan into two loans for the purpose of charging 
an additional fee to an applicant.
    SBA considers a fee of no more than $2,500 to be reasonable for the 
services provided by a CA Lender to an applicant for assistance with 
obtaining a CA loan. SBA will monitor this fee and, if adjustments are 
necessary, SBA may revise this amount by publishing a notice with 
request for comment in the Federal Register.
    If the CA Lender charges the applicant a fee for assistance with 
obtaining a CA loan, the CA Lender must disclose the fee to the 
applicant and SBA by completing the Compensation Agreement (SBA Form 
159) in accordance with the regulation at Sec.  103.5 and the 
procedures set forth in SOP 50 10.
    The remaining sections of 13 CFR 120.221 (sections (b) through (e)) 
remain unchanged. Thus, in appropriate circumstances as set forth in 
current Sec. Sec.  120.221(b) through (e) and further clarified in SOP 
50 10, a CA Lender may charge an applicant or borrower extraordinary 
servicing fees, out of pocket expenses, a late payment fee, and for 
legal services charged on an hourly basis.

h. Compensation and Fee Limitations Applicable to Lender Service 
Providers and Other Agents

    In the February 8, 2012 notice, SBA modified the CA Pilot Program 
requirements to allow CA Lenders to contract with Lender Service 
Providers (``LSPs''), as defined at 13 CFR 103.1(d). SBA will continue 
to allow CA Lenders to contract with LSPs, but is modifying some of the 
requirements applicable to LSPs, including total fee limits and

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limitations on receiving compensation from both the CA Lender and the 
applicant in connection with the same loan application.
    SBA is modifying 13 CFR 103.4(g), which permits a limited exception 
to the ``two master'' prohibition when an Agent \9\ acts as a Packager 
\10\ and is compensated by the applicant for packaging services, and 
the same Agent also acts as a Referral Agent \11\ and is compensated by 
the lender for those activities in connection with the same loan 
application. SBA believes there is, at a minimum, an appearance of a 
conflict of interest when an Agent represents both the applicant and 
the CA Lender on the same loan application. Further, when conducting 
lender oversight activities, SBA has observed numerous instances where 
applicants have been erroneously charged for services that were 
provided for a lender, not the applicant. In order to prevent any 
conflicts of interest from arising and to ensure the applicants are not 
improperly charged for services provided to the CA Lender, SBA is 
modifying 13 CFR 103.4(g) to eliminate the exception to the ``two 
master prohibition.'' Thus, for purposes of the CA Pilot Program, an 
Agent, including an LSP, may not provide services to both the applicant 
and the CA Lender and be compensated by both parties in connection with 
the same loan application.
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    \9\ Agent is defined in 13 CFR 103.1(a) as an authorized 
representative, including an attorney, accountant, consultant, 
packager, lender service provider, or any other person representing 
an applicant or participant by conducting business with SBA.
    \10\ Packager is defined in 13 CFR 103.1(e) as an Agent who is 
employed and compensated by an Applicant or lender to prepare the 
Applicant's application for financial assistance from SBA. SBA 
determines whether or not one is a ``Packager'' on a loan-by-loan 
basis.
    \11\ Referral Agent is defined in 13 CFR 103.1(f) as a person or 
entity who identifies and refers an Applicant to a lender or a 
lender to an Applicant. The Referral Agent may be employed and 
compensated by either an Applicant or a lender.
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    The regulation at 13 CFR 103.5 sets forth, among other things, the 
requirement for all Agents to disclose to SBA the compensation received 
for services provided to an applicant and requires that fees charged 
must be considered reasonable by SBA. In an effort to clarify what SBA 
considers reasonable and to prevent applicants from being overcharged 
by Agents, SBA is modifying this regulation to limit the total fees 
that an Agent or Agents may charge an applicant in connection with 
obtaining a CA loan. An Agent or Agents may charge a maximum of up to 
2.5% of the CA loan amount, or $7,000, whichever is less.
    If an Agent provides more than one service to an applicant (e.g., 
packaging and referral services), only one fee is permitted for all 
services performed by the Agent. Further, if more than one Agent (e.g., 
a Packager and a Referral Agent) provides assistance to the applicant 
in obtaining the CA loan, the amount of all fees that the applicant is 
required to pay must be combined to meet the maximum allowable fee set 
by SBA. (However, a fee charged to the applicant by the CA Lender in 
accordance with modified 13 CFR 120.221(a), as described above, will 
not be counted toward the maximum allowable fee for an Agent or 
Agents.) These maximum limits apply regardless of whether the Agent's 
fee is based on a percentage of the loan amount or on an hourly basis.
    SBA considers a fee of the lesser of 2.5% of the guaranteed loan 
amount or $7,000 to be reasonable for the services provided by an Agent 
or Agents to an applicant in connection with obtaining a CA loan. SBA 
will monitor this fee and, if adjustments are necessary, SBA may revise 
this amount from time to time by publishing a notice with request for 
comments in the Federal Register.
    Finally, SBA is also modifying the last sentence in 13 CFR 103.5(c) 
to remove the word ``directly.'' This change clarifies that 
compensation paid by the CA Lender to a Lender Service Provider may not 
be charged to the applicant, either directly or indirectly.

4. General Information

    The changes in this Notice are limited to the CA Pilot Program 
only. All other SBA guidelines and regulatory waivers or modifications 
related to the CA Pilot Program remain unchanged. The regulatory waiver 
and modifications described in this Notice are authorized by 13 CFR 
120.3, which provides that the SBA Administrator may suspend, modify or 
waive rules for a limited period of time to test new programs or ideas. 
These modifications apply only to loans made under the CA Pilot Program 
and will last only for the duration of the pilot, which expires 
September 30, 2022.
    SBA has provided more detailed guidance in the form of a 
Participant Guide which is being updated to reflect these changes and 
will be available on SBA's website at http://www.sba.gov. SBA may 
provide additional guidance, through SBA notices, which may also be 
published on SBA's website at http://www.sba.gov/category/lender-navigation/forms-notices-sops/notices. Questions regarding the CA Pilot 
Program may be directed to the Lender Relations Specialist in the local 
SBA district office. The local SBA district office may be found at 
http://www.sba.gov/about-offices-list/2.

    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 636(a)(25) and 13 CFR 120.3.

    Dated: September 4, 2018.
Linda E. McMahon,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2018-19885 Filed 9-11-18; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 8025-01-P